McDonald’s - Earnings Call - Q1 2011
April 21, 2011
Transcript
Speaker 8
Hello, and welcome to McDonald's April 21, 2011 Investor Conference Call. At the request of McDonald's Corporation, this conference is being recorded. Following today's presentation, there will be a question and answer session for investors. At that time, investors only may ask a question by pressing star one on their touch-tone phone. I'd now like to turn the conference over to Ms. Kathy Martin, Vice President of Investor Relations for McDonald's Corporation. Ms. Martin, you may begin.
Speaker 4
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. With me on the call are Chief Executive Officer Jim Skinner, Chief Financial Officer Pete Benson, and Chief Operating Officer Don Thompson. Today's conference call is being webcast live and recorded for replay via phone, webcast, and podcast. Before I turn it over to Jim, I want to remind everyone that, as always, the forward-looking statements in our earnings release and 8-K filing also apply to our comment. Both of these documents are available at www.investor.mcdonalds.com, as are any reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures mentioned on today's call with their corresponding GAAP measures. Now I'll turn it over to Jim.
Speaker 0
Thank you, Kathy. Good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to share McDonald's latest quarterly results, which reflect the continued strength of our business. For the first quarter, worldwide comparable sales were up 4.2%, operating income increased 7% in constant currencies, and EPS reached $1.15, a 12% increase in constant currencies. Our success continues to be a system-wide effort. In the United States, comparable sales for the quarter increased 2.9%, while operating income declined 2%, as it was negatively impacted by a 4 percentage point decline in our operating gains against 2010. Comparable sales in Europe rose a healthy 5.7%, and operating income grew 12% in constant currencies. In Asia-Pacific/Middle East/Africa, or APMEA, comparable sales grew 3.2%, and operating income rose 18% in constant currencies. The 2010 charge for Japan's strategic restaurant closings benefited APMEA's 2011 growth rate by 12 percentage points and the consolidated growth rate by 2 percentage points.
Our momentum is continuing into April, with our global comparable sales trending in line or better than the first quarter. These results are a testament to the continued relevance of our Plan to Win and its relentless focus on those five P's: people, products, place, price, and promotion. The economic climate is still less than ideal, from a slow and uneven recovery to significantly rising commodity costs and fragile consumer confidence. We continue to succeed by staying true to our proven plans and listening to consumers. We're elevating our business to meet their needs in a holistic way, with attention paid to each one of the growth priorities under our Plan to Win. Optimizing the menu with the right food and beverage offerings, modernizing the customer experience by upgrading every aspect of our restaurants from service to design, and broadening our accessibility through continued convenience and value initiatives.
It's not just one initiative, but the combination of all of them that is driving our growth. This approach isn't revolutionary, it's evolutionary. We focus on improvements on top of an already strong and healthy base. The alignment of the McDonald's system around our global growth drivers and then scaling and executing against each of them is what will continue to grow our business and increase our market share. In the area of menu, we're delivering results by focusing on our core offerings, which drive the majority of our business. At the same time, we balance this with new food and beverage news around relevant products that our customers want. We're tapping into opportunities to further build key categories from chicken and beef to beverages and breakfast. We're already in a number of billion-dollar brands, as you know, to leverage along the way.
With the benefit of shared learnings from markets around the world, we will continue to deliver a strong global pipeline for today and into the future. In chicken, we've taken a well-known brand, McNuggets, and featured larger sharing portions with great success. In January, the United States drove double-digit sales increases in the product with a promotion of 20-piece McNuggets, while the UK launched a 20-piece share box that resulted in sales that were more than double the initial projections. Australia continued to see success with its popular new chicken bites, a smaller bite-sized chicken offering, and they're testing several oven-baked chicken offerings as part of our efforts to keep innovating in that category. Beef continues to provide opportunities with products like our iconic Big Mac and more recent additions like the Angus Burger. Several markets celebrated the 40th anniversary of the Big Mac.
And in France, the double cheeseburger continued to be a strong seller throughout the quarter. Line extensions and locally relevant limited-time offers continue to drive gains across the system. Europe has been doing this with great success, and our other areas of the world are taking the learnings and applying them to grow their business. Japan hit the mark with its highly popular Big America 2 burger campaign. In February, the U.S. added the chipotle and bacon flavor to its line of Angus Burgers and Snack Wraps, which drove total Angus Burger sales to their highest rate in nearly a year and increased total unit movement by more than 30%. This month, Canada is launching its new line of Angus Burgers. The U.S. is targeting additional opportunities for line extensions and limited-time offerings in both beef and chicken as it explores the use of artisan breads and a variety of toppings.
They're taking really a page out of Europe's playbook. Turning to beverages, we're in the early stages of leveraging this platform around the world. In the U.S., the winter months helped to boost our growing line of hot McCafé offerings, with sales of specialty coffees increasing 17% from a year ago. The U.S. will build on its momentum with the launch of a frozen strawberry lemonade in May, along with a new unique smoothie flavor this summer and a re-hit of the popular value drinks. Beverages in the U.S. are a $146 billion business, and we have only scratched the surface on our opportunity there. Beverages are also important outside the United States. In China, we have more than 145 McCafés, and in Europe, more than 1,350. In other markets such as Canada and Australia, they're testing various products from the U.S. lineup of specialty coffees and blended ice drinks.
Now, let me wrap up the discussion on menu with breakfast. In the United States, food news from the quarter was the launch of fruit and maple oatmeal, which you all heard about, which strengthened our overall nutritional profile and gave customers another great tasting high-quality option, not only at breakfast but all day long. In China and Japan, both made gains at breakfast through a combination of compelling value and focus on strong menu offerings. Now, regarding Japan, our thoughts continue to be with the Japanese people as they work to put their devastation behind them and rebuild their country. Our business in Japan was certainly impacted and continues to face some challenges, although the effect on our overall income, as you know, is minor. Our foremost concern is to ensure the welfare of our people and then getting all of our restaurants back up and running.
I want to take this opportunity to thank the entire McDonald's system for its support and everyone on our Japan team for all they're doing to help their people, their country, and their business. In addition to menu, we're driving gains by making our restaurants even better and more relevant for our guests. We're staying focused on improved service through training, technology, and an unyielding commitment to operations excellence. All of this is helping to lift customer satisfaction scores across our system, especially in APMEA, with China and Japan continuing to lead the way in service and hospitality, and Australia, which scored its highest customer satisfaction marks ever in January. In addition, more than 70% of our APMEA markets have increased their peak hour guest counts through optimized operations and capacity initiatives.
U.S. and Europe also achieve higher customer satisfaction scores, and Europe continues to make our dining experience more convenient than ever. France and Southern Europe are equipping an additional 250 restaurants with software kiosks to deliver a more convenient ordering experience, while the UK is bringing a touch-free payment option to all of its 1,200 restaurants this summer, providing even greater speed and convenience for our customers. The new, more user-friendly POS system that we've talked about is now in 7,500 restaurants across the U.S., and it's easing the job of our crew so they can spend more time on customer service. We're also continuing to ramp up our system-wide reimaging efforts with all areas of the world focused on making our restaurants more contemporary and in tune with modern demands and tastes.
Australia and Europe remain out in front on this effort, with the U.S.making progress and planning to complete 600 reimages this year. In Europe, we're targeting 850 reimages and another 500 in Asia. We continue to see the desired results from our reimaging, with improved perceptions of our brand and higher sales differentiating McDonald's from the rest. Our brand, our business, and our operators are all strong, making this a perfect time to invest in our future. Finally, we're driving the business by continuing to make our brand more accessible and in step with how customers work and live. In the U.S., we're delivering greater convenience and accessibility through extended hours, which also continue to drive sales and guest counts. In APMEA, we're building on our convenience by advancing our dessert kiosks and delivery service in Korea, as well as China, where each platform is achieving double-digit top sales.
We're opening new restaurants and markets where the opportunity exists to strengthen penetration and expand our customer base, including China and many countries in Asia, as well as Russia, France, and Italy. Meanwhile, we remain committed to value across our menu as consumers everywhere continue to count on McDonald's for everyday brand and affordability. In the United States, our Dollar Menu at breakfast continues to be a strong traffic driver, while Dollar Menu the rest of the day remains a consistent and highly valued platform for our consumers. Across Europe, markets have put an emphasis on everyday affordability, like the UK Savor Menu and Little Tasters that give consumers a wider range of menu and price options. In APMEA, value remains an important part of our business, with our popular value lunch program driving strong results in numerous markets.
Now, those are a few highlights of how we've maintained our strength into 2011 and how we'll continue to drive success. Executing all of these drivers and building the business for the long term is achieved through our world-class owner-operators, suppliers, crew, and staff. Together, we're committed to supporting the restaurants that serve our 64 million customers every day, whether it's through our training classes at Hamburger University, which is celebrating its 50th year, or by hiring new employees to better serve our growing customer base, as we did earlier this week in the United States and Canada during National Hiring Days. We also remain committed to our Plan to Win strategy, as well as our philosophy of financial discipline and enhanced shareholder value.
We continue to have a healthy balance sheet, the highest credit rating in the industry, and a robust business that generated $6.3 billion in cash from operations in 2010. After reinvesting in the business, we remain committed to returning all of our free cash flow over the long term to investors through a combination of dividends and share repurchases. In the first quarter, we bought back 18.4 million shares, totaling $1.4 billion, and paid a dividend of $0.61 per share for an additional $635 million. Overall, I'm pleased by our first quarter performance. The fundamentals of our business remain strong, and our entire system is aligned behind our proven strategies in delivering the very best customer experience every time. With that, I will now turn it over to Pete Benson.
Speaker 5
Thanks, Jim. Hello, everyone. Our Plan to Win strategy with a balance across the five P's continues to deliver higher sales and improve profitability. Against the backdrop of tentative and uneven improvement in the global economy, system-wide sales increased 6% in constant currencies in the first quarter. Operating income reached $1.8 billion, up 7% in constant currencies, and combined operating margin reached 29.9%. The largest driver of operating income is our franchise margins, representing nearly 70% of consolidated restaurant margin dollars. Franchise margin dollars rose to $1.6 billion, an 8% increase in constant currencies, with each area of the world contributing. Consolidated franchise margin percent rose 70 basis points to 81.9%, as positive comparable sales more than offset cost increases.
Before I turn to company operating margins, I wanted to provide some perspective on our updated commodity cost outlook and how we view pricing in relation to some of the increased pressures on margins. Since January, the global commodity markets have experienced significant increases. As a result, we expect additional pressure as we move throughout the year, especially in the U.S. We are seeing cost increases on virtually every item in our basket, with beef accounting for about a third of the additional increase. Reduced herd sizes, increased demand, and a weaker U.S. dollar driving up exports are all contributing to the increase in beef costs. As a result, our U.S. grocery basket is now projected to be up about 4%-4.5% for the year, with greater pressure to be experienced in the second and third quarters.
In Europe, our range of increase has narrowed as we now expect commodities to rise 4%-4.5% this year. This is not significantly different from our previous guidance, as many of the global factors impacting U.S. commodities are having a smaller impact in Europe. Our goal in managing our supply chain remains unchanged to maintain competitive and predictable pricing to the restaurants and ultimately to our customers. With our scale, infrastructure, and relationships, we believe our supply chain continues to be a competitive advantage for the McDonald's system. Balancing cost pressures with menu pricing and market share growth is not new to our system. We have successfully managed this in the past and are confident we can do so again. Considering the current inflationary environment, along with the strength of our business, we believe we have some pricing elasticity.
We plan to offset some, but not necessarily all, of the inflationary pressures with price increases, opting to take smaller increases over the course of the year to balance the impact on the consumer and our traffic. We look to keep increases below the food away from home growth rate, while also being mindful of what's happening at the grocery stores. Our demand-based pricing tool will guide the system in making the best pricing decisions for the business. Growing guest counts and market share has been key to our success these past few years. Accordingly, in the current environment, we are willing to invest some margin in the short term to continue to grow our business for the long term. Each area of the world has taken some price in 2011.
In the U.S., we took a 1% price increase in early March and will likely take additional increases during the year. Across Europe, we have also increased prices by about 1% in the first quarter. In addition, when the VAT increased in certain markets, additional increases were taken to cover the tax, with no net benefit to sales. Further price increases, while likely, will be balanced amidst the many cost pressures and austerity environment in this region. With that as a backdrop, let's discuss first quarter company margins. Global company operating margin dollars increased 4% in constant currencies to $736 million. Company operating margin percent declined 50 basis points to 17.7%, reflecting positive comparable sales that were more than offset by higher commodity, labor, and other costs. In the U.S., our basket of goods was up nearly 1% for the quarter.
This increase, along with small increases in many other costs, including labor, contributed to a 90 basis point decline in company operating margins to 19.5%. Despite some of the near-term cost challenges, all of which are manageable, our U.S. business remains strong, and we continue to see market share growth. Turning to Europe, company operating margins decreased 10 basis points to 17.2%, as strong comparable sales mostly offset increased commodities and labor, including the increased social charges in Russia. Europe's grocery bill was up 3.7% in the quarter. In Asia-Pacific/Middle East/Africa, company operating margins decreased 50 basis points to 17.5%, primarily due to inflationary pressures in labor and commodities, partly offset by comparable sales growth. In addition, the acceleration of new restaurant openings in China is contributing to the lower margin %, as they initially experienced pre-opening and higher labor and training costs, just like all other markets.
China's new restaurant sales and margins then grow significantly over time. We continued to get leverage on G&A spending, which rose about 2% in constant currencies. This increase was in line with our expectations, and we are on track for full-year G&A to decrease about 2% in constant currencies. Similar to what we have experienced the last few quarters, the earnings contribution from other operating income declined in the first quarter. With fewer affiliated restaurants and the majority of refranchising gains behind us, we will not be recognizing the significant levels of income that we have in recent years. As indicated in our February sales release, the first quarter tax rate of 28.8% was lower than the full-year guidance due to a non-recurring deferred tax benefit related to our foreign operations.
Our guidance for the year remains 30% to 32%, implying the subsequent quarter's effective tax rates will be at the high end of our guidance. We remain committed to building future returns and enhancing long-term shareholder value through growing our business by adding new units and driving same-store sales at existing restaurants. We are on track to open 1,100 new restaurants this year, with 156 opened in the first quarter, including 40 in China. Reimaging will be a key differentiator for our existing restaurants in the years to come. We see tremendous opportunity to update our asset base, as only 20% of our exteriors and 45% of our interiors currently reflect a modern contemporary look. This year, we plan to reimage another 7% of our restaurants, or about 2,200 locations. We made good progress in the first quarter toward that goal.
The U.S. completed almost 90 reimages and has over 60 sites under construction. We're on track to completing 600 this year and are expecting to do more in 2012. Europe continues to lead our reimaging efforts, particularly its major markets. Over 70% of our interiors have been reimaged, with the remainder to be reimaged by the end of 2012. About 40% of exteriors have been reimaged, so we'll take another few years to complete those. We completed 100 reimages in Europe in the first quarter. Lastly, let me touch on foreign currency translation, which positively impacted first quarter results by $0.03. The U.S. dollar has recently weakened against most currencies, especially our four major currencies: the Euro, Pound, Australian, and Canadian dollars. As a result, at current exchange rates, we expect second quarter EPS to be positively impacted by $0.06-$0.07, with a full-year benefit of $0.15-$0.17.
Please take this as directional only because I know rates will change as we move throughout 2011. McDonald's first quarter results are a testament to our system's focus on the customer and execution against the plan to win, despite a volatile and unpredictable global environment. That focus and execution is yielding long-term value for our shareholders and our system. Looking ahead, our fundamentals are strong, our strategies are sound, and our system is aligned. I'm confident our commitment to executing our plan will continue to deliver strong results. Thank you. Now I'll turn it over to Kathy to begin our Q&A.
Speaker 4
All right, thanks, Pete. I'm going to open the call now for analysts and investor questions. Please press star one if you have a question and star two to remove yourself from the queue. We're going to try to give as many people as possible the opportunity to ask questions. If you can limit yourself to one, we'll come back to you for follow-up questions as time allows. Our first question is from David Palmer of UBS.
Speaker 19
Thanks, Kathy. Quick question on the U.S. business. It feels like the cold beverage innovation has been a bigger driver of your sales than hot beverages, at least over the last couple of years. Even iced coffee, I remember, was sneaky big as a driver. You have had some hits as recently as last summer. It even looks like the seasonality of this beverage sort of lift has been a key reason for your gap to the industry numbers being wider in the summer than they are in the winter. Do you see it this way? Is this something that you continue to believe will occur with summer beverages, perhaps widening your gap again?
Speaker 0
David, this is Jim. Thanks for the question. We're very fortunate this morning. We have the guy that initiated the combined beverage initiative in the United States, Don Thompson. Don's going to respond to your question.
Speaker 13
Hey, David. How are you? Just a couple of things. One is, I think as you look at cold and hot beverages, our goal has always been actually to have enough in the pipeline that we were able to be able to kind of mitigate some of the seasonality impact you've talked about. We're still focused on the McCafé hot beverages. We did hot mocha last year. I think the team's doing a solid job of advertising those. On the cold side, you're very astute in terms of the question, but there are other weapons in the arsenal there. Not only frappes and smoothies, which were really, really big hits, to your point, iced coffee, but also don't forget the entire iced or the cold beverage movement in terms of dollar drinks, which typically are across the summer months. We've got quite a bit going on with those cold beverages.
The U.S. also has quite an inventory in the pipeline relative to looking at things that are upcoming, like strawberry lemonade. We've got another smoothie flavor that's coming out this year. We've been able to be very successful, and it has helped the business tremendously. However, we also want to make sure we continue to stay focused on the hot drinks. Lastly, on the hot drink side, also we can't forget that the predominance of hot drinks is in drip coffee. We have quite a lot of business clearly as we've gone from just, if you look at overall beverages in terms of the McCafé, 2% several years ago when we talked to over 6% today.
Speaker 0
I think the other thing, David, to think about in this is we invested a lot in this, as you know, and even changed the footprint of the store relative to the McCafé offerings. We have therefore provided the technology, equipment, and capability to prepare these drinks, if you will, in a rather seamless fashion. What I would say is that all of them are contributing at a level where we wouldn't think about changing the mixer or taking anything off the menu.
Speaker 4
Our next question is from Joe Buckley from Bank of America Merill Lynch.
Speaker 15
Hi, thank you. I want to ask two questions. First, if you could share with us what the China same-store sales number was for the quarter. Then, Pete, I want to go back to your comments on the U.S. I believe you said the food basket in the U.S. in the first quarter was up only 1%. Yet you had about 90 basis points' worth of margin pressure on a pretty good comp. I guess I'm wondering how that all gels together.
Speaker 5
Sure, Joe. First of all, we were talking before the call. We knew you would ask about the China comp, so we're prepared for that. 6.5% was the comp for the quarter compared to a 1.4% comp a year ago first quarter. Regarding the U.S., the commodities were still the biggest. It's a couple of things. One, as I mentioned, we did a 1% price increase, but that was not until early March. We hadn't done another price increase since late 2009. We had no benefit from pricing essentially in the quarter. We did have the food cost pressure. Compared to the first quarter last year, we had, let's say, 150 basis points of benefit from lower food costs. Here we had a 40 basis point drag from the higher food costs.
Every other line item, it seemed, was going just slightly negative. We had a 10 basis point hit from labor and a 10 basis point hit from higher promotional costs, which were some of the oatmeal giveaways and discounting. We had higher utilities, a little higher depreciation, a little higher snowplowing expense those first couple of months. We saw most of these other expenses higher in those first two months of the quarter when the sales were a little bit softer. We didn't have a benefit from refranchising that we'd had the last several quarters. Predominantly, it was the change in food cost that was the biggest driver. Yet we had a lot of these other small items that accumulated to the impact.
Speaker 4
Our next question is from Greg Badishkanian from Citi.
Speaker 3
Great, thanks. Just kind of following up on the lineup for 2011 in the U.S., I mean, really solid, you had a really solid lineup in 2010. You talked about beverages. Are there some other kind of factors that might be able to help continue that momentum in 2011?
Speaker 13
Hey, Greg, this is Don. Actually, quite a few things that are in the pipeline. One of the points too, we've got quite a few questions relative to menu pipeline. Here's the thing that's really working well. We really have a global menu pipeline. I'll talk about the U.S. pipeline here too. As I talk about it, I'll talk about a couple of the products that the U.S. is now looking at that are coming from overseas, but also some of the products from the U.S. that are being exported overseas because we got a lot of traveling around. Right now, the U.S. is focused, and you guys will see in the next, I'll say in a short time, you'll see more innovation relative to the smoothie drinks. I think you probably already know we probably talked about pineapple mango, and there's strawberry lemonade coming up on the beverage side.
We've got additional nugget promotions. We've got the revamping of the chicken lineup in terms of the sandwiches that are there. The whole nugget piece has been phenomenal for us. I know the U.S. is going to hit that again, along with the ongoing support in the restaurants clearly of Angus and the return of the Asian salad. Those are some of the things that you're going to see in a relatively short period of time. If you look a little longer out, there's a few products, actually quite a few products that the U.S. has in test, and we'll have to wait to see which of these make it to market. Everything from spicy chicken sandwiches, we have some of those across APMEA. The U.S. is looking at those quite intently. There's a smaller product called McBites, a snacking type product that we're testing over in Australia.
Actually, it's rolled out in a market in Australia now. The U.S. is looking at, clearly, they're looking at some of the sandwiches like Chicken Mythic, Chicken Legend that we have from Europe, just as Europe is looking at the fruit, the frappes, and the smoothies. There's quite a few things that are in the pipeline now. We had a discussion with the U.S. team last week relative to the pipeline, and it looks solid.
Speaker 4
All right. Our next question is from Jason West from Deutsche Bank.
Speaker 16
Yeah, thanks. Just want to get a little more color on the margin outlook, particularly in the U.S. I know you guys don't give specific guidance, but with the pressure this quarter, and then commodities picking up, and then you've got some pricing coming in. I mean, should we expect margins to get worse before they get better in the U.S., or do you think you have enough pricing and sort of maybe not some of these one-time or small items that added up in the first quarter for the rest of the year that maybe the margins won't get a lot worse from here?
Speaker 5
Jason, it's Pete. You hit on the two drivers, right? The costs are going to get a little bit worse, and we know we'll get the benefit of our March price increase, along with additional price increases benefiting some of those, what I'd call one-time things that were a nuisance in the first couple of months won't recur. It will be challenging to grow margins in that environment. There's no question about that. I'm not going to attempt to predict if 90 basis points decline is going to be the benchmark for the year or not. You hit on the things we're focused on, which is what is going to be the price increase and how to best manage the costs.
At the same time, as I did mention, in this environment, the last few years we've been very successful at driving guest counts, and we don't want to do anything on the pricing side that's going to dramatically change that. Yet recognize that food away from home is projected to be up 3%-4% this year. That's what gives us the opportunity to get some price. We're going to balance all that. We don't just manage to the one margin number, but I think you've hit on the things that we're focused on.
Speaker 13
Jason, just to remind us too, we've had similar conversations in years past. A couple of years ago, I remember having similar conversations when we began to focus on guest counts. The reality is we have continued to outperform the market, we outperform all of our competitors in the space. The reason for that has been because of the guest count growth and then at the appropriate time, being able to take price and leveraging the overall product mix. Last year, we were focused very heavily on menu and value. This year, the U.S. is beginning to focus a little bit more on some of the higher margin products. All of those things will go into the mix as we attempt to manage this even further throughout the year.
Speaker 4
Our next question is from Rachel Rothman from Susquehanna.
Speaker 12
Yes, hello. This is Jake Bartlett in for Rachel. I had a question just on your view of the U.S. consumer. I think in the past, you've talked about maybe switching some promotional activity more towards the premium end. I'm wondering whether that's changed at all in the last few months, whether you think you're going to need to focus on value, whether the industry itself is just going to remain fairly focused on value for the balance of 2011.
Speaker 0
This is Jim. We're not going to change our strategy around what we deliver to the consumer on value. That's number one. Everyday affordability is a mainstay of McDonald's strategy regarding the menu. The combination of all of the things that I talked about this morning is how we deliver consumer relevance. Whether it's the strategy around what we're marketing in that particular month or the things that Don talked about, the menu coming up throughout the year, some of those are standard processes. If you take value drinks, for example, and the proliferation of some of the new drinks, that's an annual thing, particularly in the United States. Of course, we view the opportunity to add relevance for our consumers around all of these things.
Whether it's increasing the marketing around a particular premium item or everyday affordability and the balance around all of that, I think it's business as usual as we go through 2011 because not much has changed regarding the consumer in 2011. Consumer confidence took a dip in March, where it had gone up in February, and the unemployment's just under 9%. There are certain things going on in the marketplace that would lead you to believe, as Pete mentioned, that consumer spending is expected to be up, but not substantially different than how we've looked at the business over the last couple of years. It's a mix, and it's a balance, and we're pretty good at it.
Speaker 4
OK. Next question is from Sara Senatore from Sanford Bernstein.
Speaker 7
Thank you. Just actually a couple of questions there, follow-ups about one about the U.S. and one about China. The U.S., I just want to touch on the announcement about the hiring that you've done. Part of the rationale seemed to be about more 24/7 and maybe building up service. Can you give any sense of whether this, you know, what kind of impact on comps or on margins we might expect to see from some of the initiatives that you seem to be hiring in support of? The other piece was on China. I noticed your 6.5% comp, which is obviously a very good comp, but maybe a little bit softer than some of the other local competitors who are a little bit higher. Were you promoting more? Was there something about price there that maybe you had a little bit less on price than some of your competitors?
Thanks.
Speaker 0
Don just came back from that market, and I'd also like to have him chat with you about the issue of what was the National Hiring Day?
Speaker 5
National Hiring Day.
Speaker 0
Sorry.
Speaker 5
Yes.
Speaker 13
Hi, Sara. First off, on National Hiring Day, the intent really for us was to be able to, in a solid voice, be able to leverage the McDonald's strength to be able to put a call out in terms of employment. We thought it would be good for us as McDonald's. We do and have continued to hire through some of the economic downturns. We also thought it would be a more unified way to get the message out that McDonald's is hiring. Our focus internally is on leveraging that labor to continue to help us grow the business. We've grown guest counts tremendously, and we want to make sure that we're able to provide the same level of operational excellence in the restaurants that we've been able to provide.
Now, relative to specific focal points, we are very focused on our peak hours and how we continue to build our business during the peak hour guest count time frame. We'll leverage primarily labor for that. However, we're also extending and expanding in terms of our extended hours. We're going to use the labor wherever we need it in the business. That's what's happening with the National Hiring Day. Relative to China, I just came back from China, and I tell you, it's my third visit. I was extremely impressed with our development strategies and extremely impressed with the talent we brought on, some really outstanding new talent in the development arena. The training that we have going on right now as we accelerate for the new openings, and we accelerate openings, has been phenomenal.
These restaurants have opened up, and I saw quite a few of them in my three days across China, both in Shanghai, Beijing, and even Tianjin. We are opening restaurants that look great and are operating at very high levels. To do that, we've got to train our teams, and we train them in existing restaurants. We have an accelerated pace there, which is really working out well. In terms of things we do that others don't do, I can't speak to all that others do. I will say this. Our 6.5% is based upon also a tremendous guest count growth, not just taking price. Having said that, what that means is that we are building quite a bit of breakfast traffic. We're building quite a bit of lunch traffic with our value strategies.
Back in November, we went off of that strategy for one month and saw a little business dip. We've gone right back to our value messaging around lunch and breakfast, and it's paying great dividends. Will we take price in China? We will take price in China, have taken some price, but not at the scale possibly of some others. We're going to continue to stay focused on guest count building.
Speaker 4
Next question is from Jeff Bernstein from Barclays Capital.
Speaker 18
Great. Thank you very much. Pete, just one clarification on your earlier comment and then a separate question. Clarification relates to the discussion on margins. I think you said you guys make a conscious decision to invest some margin in the short term to grow the business in the long term. As it relates to the U.S., it seems like you're running 1% of pricing now. You mentioned being cognizant of food away from home being at 3% to 4%. I'm just wondering, as inflation gets higher, what the detail is behind that kind of investing in the margin. Would you be willing to go a whole lot closer to that 3%-4%, or would you be cautious of that? The actual question is just on the European market.
Entering 2011, it seemed like everyone's focus was on austerity measures and how that would negatively impact everyone there, including yourselves. Meanwhile, you're now running a 5% plus comp. I'm just wondering, is there anything you're seeing across the menu or across day parts, or have you changed your promotional campaign? It just seems like any color in terms of how you've been able to put up those type numbers, whether there's more and less resilient type markets, any kind of color would be great. Thank you.
Speaker 5
All right, Jeff. In the U.S., the food away from home, the trailing 12 months through February is up about 1.5%. The 3% to 4% was the full-year projection. I think you can do that, but just to clarify. Historically, what our lesson tells us is getting ahead of food away from home is bad for traffic, but staying at or just below it is kind of the optimal place. We are going to continue to watch that as we move throughout the year. It is one of the inputs to our pricing that is really more of an art than it is a science, but it definitely is an input that we are going to keep an eye on, as well as, like I said, what is happening at grocery stores and food at home and gas prices and some of those other things.
It will be a guide for us as we move throughout the year. Regarding Europe, we have not seen any significant change in consumer behavior as a result of some of the austerity measures going on. The UK, for example, had the 2.5% VAT increase and some other austerity measures in the country. They ran nearly a double-digit comp for the quarter, very strong sales momentum and guest count growth. Across Europe, the strategies have been very similar in the first quarter to what we had in 2010 and prior. Promotion of premium products, rotating food events, at the same time hitting everyday affordability with the equivalent of their dollar menus and their mid-tier menus, the fourth tier. It has been, again, a combination that has been relatively consistent this first quarter relative to 2010, and we are cautiously optimistic that that environment will continue for us.
Speaker 8
Next question is from Mitch Speiser from Buckingham Research.
Speaker 6
Thanks very much. My question is for Pete. I know no one has a crystal ball, but three months ago, your U.S. food cost outlook was 2%-2.5%. I think it sounded like you had pretty high confidence in that. Even three months before that, you had high confidence in a 2% inflation forecast. Now, three months later, that food inflation forecast has doubled. I am just wondering, as you look back at the past three months, what was missed in that forecast? It seemed like a lot of folks on the sidelines were maybe ahead of that because we do want to have confidence in your food cost outlook going forward. Maybe what was missed over the past three months, and how much confidence do you have in the U.S. food cost basket outlook of 4%-4.5%? Thanks.
Speaker 5
Hey, Mitch. It's nothing that was missed in the outlook in January. It's actually the events that have happened since then that have dramatically moved all the markets, from floods in Australia, which were impacting the beef markets, to the unrest in the Middle East, which has driven oil to over $110 a barrel, to release of the grain stock inventories, which are at all-time lows, to the weak U.S. dollar, which has driven beef exports up over 30%. It's been all of these factors that have impacted to a significant degree in the course of just three months virtually every item in our basket. Our supply chain had great visibility into matters at the time when they gave the forecast. Several significant things have happened, none to offset. Everything going in the direction of higher costs.
I would be surprised, as you listen to other companies, that they aren't also out there updating their guidance, as I've already seen a few of them do.
Speaker 4
Thanks. Next question is from John Ivankoe from JPMorgan.
Speaker 11
Hi, great. Thank you. Just a couple of follow-ups, if I may. First is on the point of sale system. I think you said 7,500 in the U.S. I wanted to get a sense of how many company stores that's gone in and what the experience has been when that system has changed, whether there's any integration cost short term and what the cost benefit is after that integration. Secondly, Jim, I think in your remarks, you did say that you were going to keep value. I do wonder, especially with some changes competitively, whether you could perhaps change some tactics around value, perhaps changing products or maybe even price points, given the current commodity environment and what might be a slightly easing competitive environment and price in the U.S.
Speaker 0
John, thanks for the question. I'll let Don talk about the POS system in a moment. Relative to value, we're capable of changing our tactics around that and have over time. You go back to the double cheeseburger and then to the McDouble and some of those other kinds of things. On a wholesale basis, relative to providing everyday affordability, both in terms of the Dollar Menu now in the United States, the Eurosaver in Europe and various markets, and those other kinds of things, the fundamental premise of that is not going to change. Yes, you've seen over the years that different menu items have moved on and off the Dollar Menu here in the United States. On an overall basis, the expectation is that we will stay the course on the underlying everyday affordability without a whole lot of shifting in that regard.
Speaker 5
John, as a perspective before Don talks about NuPods, even with these cost increases that we're seeing this year, that brings our commodity costs really just back to 2009 levels. The input cost for those items is very similar to what it was two years ago. Although it's high this year relative to last year, it's not at an unprecedented level.
Speaker 0
Our franchisees, who I talk to and stay in touch with on this, obviously, they're our number one constituents relative to the success of the brand. They lead the charge. We're 80% franchised around the world, 89% in the United States. They all are supportive relative to how we need to go after everyday affordability and stay the course regarding that, at least in terms of my last few conversations that I've had with them. I don't think that'll change because they are just as concerned about maintaining guest count growth that we've experienced, and they know that's the driver of our success over the long term and their success.
Speaker 13
Hey, John. Relative to the POS system, it is in all of the company-operated restaurants now. It allows us to do several different things, some of which you've seen, whether that be operational ease in the drive-through, dual drive-through lanes, handheld order taking, which we're beginning to implement in more and more of the restaurants, which help with operational ease and speed of service. I think, John, you may have been in one of the restaurants. I can't remember. To see us actually or see a crew person actually go through the ordering process, they have to use far less screens now as they're taking an order, which means that the speed of service time is being decreased.
All of these things help us, again, at peak hours, so we have a higher level of capacity, can move more customers through, and they're enabling us to be able to drive some of the guest count numbers that you guys have seen.
Speaker 4
All right, the next question is from Larry Miller from RBC.
Speaker 17
Yeah, thanks. I just had a couple of clarifications and follow-ups. Pete, when you were talking about challenging to grow margins, I think you were referring to McOpCo. Is that correct? In theory, as long as your same-store sales are growing, your franchise margins should continue to expand?
Speaker 5
Franchise margins, as you know, are insulated from the commodity costs. We get a lot of leverage from growing comps there. Yes.
Speaker 4
Next question is from Andy Barish from Jefferies.
Speaker 2
Thanks. Question just back on China. I know it's not a huge part of the business, but within the overall context of APMEA, are the opening costs, is that ongoing through the year with the acceleration? How does that jibe with just inflation in wages and commodities over there? Is that big enough, I guess, to weigh on the overall APMEA margins for the year?
Speaker 13
Hi, Andy. This is Don. At this stage of the game, there was a time when we were actually behind in terms of the wage rate game, and we were trying to catch up. As you know, the Chinese government has determined that they want to double wages by the year 2015. At this state, we're above, actually, we're double-digit above the actual wage rates now and the way that they're planning on increasing. Part of the reason for that is to be able to, one, get the kind of people that we want to have in the restaurants and the right talent. As we move through the year, we don't see this. What's happening is as we accelerate the sites, clearly we'll train more people. At some point, we'll get to a steady state. Right now, we're accelerating our growth.
We have an inventory and a pipeline to build a lot more sites. This year, we're targeted, as we've said, to do between 175 to 200. When I was there, I had a chance to review many of those sites with them and look at the trading area surveys, fantastic sites that we have. The challenge in China, and it's not as much a challenge as it is really a business planning piece, is we go into many of these pre-planned, master-planned communities about a year to a year and a half ahead of time so that we can get a good stable footing. What we're seeing is first-year sales are a little softer. Second-year sales, we're seeing double-digit comps, which is exactly what we've seen historically. Those comps remain strong in the third year. The development strategy right now is sound.
We can manage the margins relative to labor, and we're in a really good position. Some of the other folks in the marketplace are trying to catch up to the position we're at. There will be another wage increase coming up soon in China. It will not impact us as much as it's going to impact others.
Speaker 4
All right. Next question is Keith Signer from Crédit Suisse.
Speaker 20
Thanks. Just a question for you on the franchisees. What it relates to is over the last couple of years, you've done a tremendous job of taking market share while at the same time expanding margins. Getting the franchisees who are a large part of the system to follow the lead of the company was really easy. In the first quarter, for the first time, this program of using a little margin to take some market share actually required to use a little margin to take some market share. Now, with some acceleration in the inflation outlook, what I worry about here is this great opportunity to continue these market share gains. Facing increasing inflation, will the franchisees follow the lead? Do you feel confident that they will follow your lead and stay kind of below that food away from home pricing level?
Have they started to push for maybe more pricing or some change in strategy? What's their response to the actual use of margin for the first time?
Speaker 0
Kate, this is Jim Skinner. Thanks for the question. First of all, I think it's very important to understand how much we collaborate with the leadership of the franchisee community regarding our strategies, everything from how we execute at the front counter and drive-through, operationally, customer satisfaction expectations, and all the way through how we market to the business and how we communicate to the business, as well as what we decide to do around everyday affordability, as I mentioned earlier. That collaboration has served us so well over the last number of years. They also understand one thing. We are in this business for the long haul. Whether you're talking about China and some investment in the margin to grow the business over time, it's a long-haul view. It's not a quarterly view. It's not a 12-month view.
Our franchisees are in the business for the long haul, and they are on board relative to our strategies around this and maintaining guest count growth. That doesn't mean that you don't have people out there that are stressing and concerned, just like we are in the company. For the most part, they follow the company lead on the pricing and the expectation. Company lead meaning McOpCo. It's not about we have skin in the game in this issue, as well as we start thinking about taking margin. Most of the time, that is in regard to how we price in McOpCo. The franchisees typically follow our lead regarding that. I see nothing out there relative to where we find ourselves in the business today, which yes, we've got some headwinds. In another six months, we may have some tailwinds.
Our consistent approach relative to how we manage the business and collaborate with the franchisees over the long term is a great benefit to our growth as a business.
Speaker 13
Hey, Kate. This is Don. Just a little texture to Jim's point, and having lived through this from 2006 as the President of the U.S. just up until last year, one of the things to keep in mind, and Jim has said this repeatedly, we really have a lot of ongoing collaboration with the franchisees. There's a standing value team as a part of our OpNet organization. They continue to look at pricing on our value menus, margin, operating cash flow in the restaurants. We also have a supply chain management collaboration with the franchisees, so they're up to speed on this ramp-up in terms of commodities. As it ramps up, those teams will give feedback to the overall system. That's in conjunction with our own folks. These are not once-every-quarter meetings. These folks are meeting on a routine and a frequent basis. Also, our cash flows have been strong.
This is not the first time we've been through this. In 2007, part of that, 2008, we've seen commodity stresses and pressures before. Each time we have, we've gotten together to focus on what are the most critical things to make sure we manage the business for the long term. These are some more commodity pressures. To Pete's point, it was the same thing we saw. We're at the same level that we were in 2009.
Speaker 4
Next question is from John Glass from Morgan Stanley.
Speaker 10
Thanks. First, if I could get Pete, you just to clarify one thing, and then I've got a question on the remodels. As it relates just to your outstanding commodity guidance of the 4%-4.5% in the U.S. specifically, what assumptions are you still making? In other words, is it assuming a certain level of commodities flat or up from here? Which ones are you assuming, just so we know how to track that going forward? That's the clarification. Just thinking about how we can get at longer-term sort of your pricing power and mix shifts. In the remodels you've done in Australia and Europe, have you seen favorable mix shifts in those versus the existing units? Have you tried to take more pricing in those units versus existing?
Does it give you more pricing power, or do you have any actual data that suggests you have more when you remodel restaurants? Thanks.
Speaker 0
Let me talk about the pricing power relative to reimaged restaurants. I go back to many years ago when we used to think that because we had a modernized restaurant, because we had ferns and brass, we could take an extra $0.05 in the big sandwiches or do whatever because our customers wouldn't understand, because of that wonderful environment that they're in, that they ought to pay more for the sandwich. That was a mistake. We don't do it that way. The modernization of our restaurants really does not give us additional pricing power on the menu. We do it because our restaurants either need to be remodeled or they're going to be built in a contemporary manner. It has little to do with overall pricing power.
Speaker 5
Regarding the commodity outlook, John, we don't get into the individual line items with you and things like that. I think it's fair to say now, compared to where we were in January, we have more secured positions. We have more hedges and things like that in the supply chain. If you look at the markets today, this is reflective of what's happened in the commodity markets over the last three months, really on several small unhedged positions. If the commodity markets move significantly from here, and the main ones, obviously, looking at beef, corn, wheat, coffee, etc., our guidance reflects where the markets are today. If they stay around these levels, the 4% to 4.5% should be locked in. If they move dramatically up or down, then we'll have to reflect that as we move forward.
Speaker 4
Next question is from RJ Hottovy from Morningstar.
Speaker 1
Great, thanks. Just a follow-up question with regard to the pricing strategy. I appreciate all the color you've given us on that particular topic. Knowing that you're no stranger to a rising gas price environment, I just wanted to get your thoughts about how you're thinking about that with respect to pricing in the back half of the year, if it changes what particular area of the menu that you might be increasing prices on, and just how that plays into the strategy.
Speaker 0
First of all, RJ, sorry, we always look at this, and I've always said, if you can't go far, you can get to McDonald's. We're convenient. We went through this one time before, the gas prices up over $4. I forget what year. It was just a couple of years ago. It didn't have a substantial impact on our overall business. Some of the interstate sites and some of the road stop sites had some small impact, but on an overall basis, it wasn't a major impact. Relative to how we look at pricing around that, that specific item is just one more nick relative to the spending that consumers have. It's really molded in or melded in into our overall pricing philosophy. Don, do you want to say something else about that?
Speaker 13
I think, Jim, you said it. The only other aspect of it is that's the reason we have the value menus that we have, so that if discretionary income begins to become impacted, we have opportunities for customers to still be able to visit McDonald's.
Speaker 4
OK, great. We are just about out of time, but we'll have a couple of last questions. One from Steven West from Stifel Nicolaus.
Speaker 9
Yeah, Don, can you talk about kind of the McCafé? You're starting to roll out kind of second-generation products now. One, as you tested kind of the, you don't have to give specific results on frozen lemonade, just what have you seen as far as cannibalization rates with the new products you've been testing? Two, looking at McCafé in the future as you roll out new products, how much capacity do you have to continue to put new products on that same system? Do you start pushing kind of the envelope there as far as your operations?
Speaker 13
Hey, Steve. We actually built the, I mean, as you all know, the big part of McCafé was us to build out that sale in the restaurant so we'd have higher capacity. We also had a strategy at that time of moving from the coffee-based drinks to the blended iced drinks to proprietary blended drinks, which is exactly where we are now. We're looking at strawberry lemonade and others in terms of the pipeline. Capacity-wise, we're in really good shape. It's the reason that we did the build-outs of the sales and also to help us in drive-through speed. Pipeline-wise, we're going to continue to look at proprietary blended drinks and more of those, continue to look at things that we can do. We've got dairy in the restaurants. We've got coffee in the restaurants. We've got fruit in the restaurants, fruit purees in the restaurants.
We're going to continue to combine those, and the chefs are working on other blended drinks there. Lastly, McCafé beverages, the McCafé average check is higher than our other average checks in the restaurant. When you look at McCafé, it's always a trade-up when that drink is purchased. We feel real good about the ongoing progress that we have and opportunity in McCafé.
Speaker 4
OK. Our last question is from David Tarantino from R. W. Baird.
Speaker 14
Hi, good morning. Just another question on the pricing front. I hate to beat this to death, but I just want to understand, are you concerned about your pricing power for the McDonald's brand in this environment? Is this approach that you're using one more of trying to balance pricing with the opportunity to maybe take some share relative to competitors?
Speaker 13
No, I don't think, David, that we're concerned about our pricing power. I want to just reflect on the question about when we reimage a restaurant, whether we have more pricing power. What we have is an opportunity to serve more customers because we increase the capacity typically, whether it's the drive-through or whether it's the service and the technology capabilities in the restaurant. I didn't mean to say that we don't have the opportunity to grow the business. It doesn't reflect directly on our ability to tell someone, look, you're in a reimaged restaurant now, so we get to raise the prices. Our pricing elasticity in the brand moves up and down based on inflation, consumer spending, consumer confidence, all of those things that we've talked about many times before. We're not worried.
We have the capability to take price over this next number of months in the U.S., as Pete and Don have talked about. It's just a matter of timing and when it makes the most sense for us, always keeping an ever-vigilant eye on everyday affordability, which is the most important thing for our consumers. I've said it many times before. They get pinched everywhere. They should not suffer the same fate at McDonald's. This look that we have at food away from home and even food at home and paying attention to that relative to the long-term credibility with our customers and pricing, it's the most important thing that we do. The answer is no, we're not worried about that elasticity or that pricing power, but we pay very close attention to it in the overall mix of how we decide to price going forward.
We never pass on directly all of our costs to the customers.
Speaker 4
Great. Thanks for all your questions. I'm going to turn it over to Jim, who has a few closing comments.
Speaker 0
Thank you, everybody, for joining us this morning. In closing, I want to reemphasize the ongoing strength of our global business and our confidence in the continued success of our brand. We are focused on smartly and strategically managing the market forces around us while relentlessly working to serve our customers better. Our fundamentals and plan-to-win strategies are strong, and I'm optimistic that we can continue to derive results in any environment moving forward. Thank you, and have a great day.